Totalitarianism

In 1948, when
Orwell's 1984 was published, World War II had just ended. One of England's
allies had been Russia, which was ruled by a despotic dictator named Joseph
Stalin. Stalin ruled with an iron fist, and was famous for his midnight purges:
he would round up hundreds of citizens at a time and murder them in deserted
areas, much as Oceania citizens are "vaporized." Stalin's victims were his
imagined enemies, such as political dissidents, artists, or Jews. Meanwhile,
Adolf Hitler, in Germany, had slaughtered his enemies as well, in the end
killing six million Jews plus nine million Slavs, gypsies, political
dissidents, homosexuals, and mentally challenged people. Mao Tse-tung in China
was fighting for communism against Chinese nationalist forces under Chiang
Kai-shek. Mao would finally defeat the nationalists in 1949 and begin a long,
oppressive totalitarian regime. Other dictators of the time included Francisco
Franco in Spain and Benito...